Otago Daily Times

Otago University students selected for global summit

- JOHN LEWIS

MAIA Dean is looking to the stars for inspiratio­n — not the twinkly ones, the Nobel prizewinni­ng ones.

And in January next year, the University of Otago secondyear physics student will get that boost when she rubs shoulders with Nobel laureates at the Global Young Scientist Summit (GYSS) in Singapore.

‘‘They’re like scientific royalty. It will be amazing to meet them face to face.

‘‘These are the kind of people that you look up to, but you don’t see their face. You just see their names and all the research and publicatio­ns they’ve done.’’

Being 19 and at the very beginning of her career in science, she said she would find inspiratio­n in hearing how they had gone through life, accomplish­ing all the things they had worked towards.

It would help shape her future, she said.

‘‘Anything I can get from these people will be gold.’’

Over the past two years, Miss

Dean has been a Discovery Scholar through the MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechno­logy.

She hoped to eventually become a research scientist — either in quantum mechanics or climate modelling.

Miss Dean will be joined at the summit by University of Otago physics PhD candidate Mohsin Ijaz.

Mr Ijaz has been researchin­g ways to convert solar energy into hydrogen, and hoped to hand his PhD thesis in early next year.

While he, too, was excited about meeting Nobel prizewinne­rs, he was also looking forward to meeting other likeminded young scientists and making connection­s with worldclass researcher­s in his field.

He hoped that through sharing his work at the summit, others may have some useful insights to offer, and viceversa.

The GYSS received more than 1500 nomination­s from more than 100 institutio­ns around the world, but just 350 applicants from about 40 countries have been selected to attend the event.

 ?? ?? Meeting scientific royalty . . . University of Otago physics PhD candidate Mohsin Ijaz and physics student Maia Dean have been selected to attend the Global Young Scientist Summit in Singapore next year.
Meeting scientific royalty . . . University of Otago physics PhD candidate Mohsin Ijaz and physics student Maia Dean have been selected to attend the Global Young Scientist Summit in Singapore next year.

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